Book, Chapter
1 1, VIII | welfare of Rome by having saved the Campidoglio [Capitol],
2 1, XXIV | also well known. For having saved the Campidoglio from the
3 1, XXIV | previously with so much glory saved.~
4 1, XL | THINGS HOW A REPUBLIC CAN BE SAVED OR RUINED BECAUSE OF SIMILAR
5 2, V | as because those who are saved are men of the mountains
6 2, V | among them there should be saved one who should have this
7 2, XII | much because much can be saved of your army having places
8 2, XVIII | was killed, Marc Anthony saved himself with virtu. None
9 2, XVIII | Parthians themselves, he saved himself skillfully; nor
10 2, XVIII | routed, half of them were saved. Marcus Attilius Regulus
11 2, XVIII | only the part which was saved through the humanity of
12 3, VI | ambush, so that Pandolfo was saved, and Julio with his companions
13 3, X | be delaying the fighting saved the state for the Romans;
14 3, X | of his forces. And what saved him from being entirely
15 3, XI | very willingly would have saved the State of Lombardy for
16 3, XVIII | the Roman encampments, and saved them, and afterwards sacked
17 3, XXXI | one of the Proveditori who saved himself, arrived in Verona
18 3, XXXIII| even without a leader, were saved by their own virtu. I do
19 3, XXXIV | afterwards called Torquatus, saved L. Manlius, his father,
20 3, XXXIX | three thousand soldiers, he saved the Roman army; and designing
21 3, XLI | appeared to him it should be saved in whatever way, and that
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